ASUU Strike: Release N50bn To Demonstrate Your Commitment – ASUU Tells Federal Govt
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The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) have asked the Nigerian government to release N50 billion
to demonstrate its commitment to the revitalisation of public universities, in
line with previous agreements with their union.
ASUU President, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi |
The striking lecturers gave
this as a condition for calling off its strike which began November 4 last
year.
The N50 billion, the union
said, will form the first tranche of the N220 billion government agreed for the
project this year and add to the N20 billion earlier released for the year.
The President of ASUU, Biodun
Ogunyemi, disclosed this in an exclusive interview with PREMIUM TIMES Wednesday
night.
He said the union is not asking
the government to release the whole N220 billion at once.
ASUU called the current strike
to press for improved funding of universities and implementation of previous
agreements with the government.
The union is also demanding
implementation of the 2009 FGN/ASUU agreements, Memorandum of Understanding
(MoU; 2012 and 2013) and Memorandum of Action (MoA, 2017) and the truncation of
the renegotiation of the union’s agreements.
The union asked the government
to release funds for the revitalisation of public universities, based on the
FGN-ASUU MoU of 2012, 2013 and the MoA of 2017. The teachers are also angry
over the failure of the government to release operational licence to the
Nigerian University Employees Pension Company (NUPEMCO).
However, a major issue dragging
the negotiations forth and back is the revitalisation of the universities. At
present, the government is yet to release the N1.1 trillion it agreed to
release as part of the funds for the revitalisation project.
The 2013 MoU stipulated that
public universities need N1.3 trillion for a modest revitalisation. The fund
was to be released in tranches of N200billion in 2013, N220billion 2014,
N220billion 2015, 220billion in 2016, N220billion in 2017 and N220billion in
2018.
The previous government of
Goodluck Jonathan released N200 billion in 2013 but since then nothing has been
released.
At the seventh meeting of
government with the leadership of ASUU January 8, the Minister of Labour and
Employment, Chris Ngige, said the dispute with the teachers was on the verge of
being resolved. He listed the fresh concessions made by the government to ASUU.
According to Mr Ngige, the
Accountant-General of the Federation and the Ministry of Finance presented
evidence that N15.4 billion had been released to public universities for
payment of salary shortfall.
On earned academic allowances,
he said President Muhammadu Buhari approved N20 billion to offset arrears of
the 2009 to 2012 verified earnings by university teachers.
As part of the agreement
reached between the union and the government before ASUU ended its industrial
action in September 2017, the Federal Government had released N22.9 billion for
earned allowances of both academic and non-academic staff across 22 Federal
universities.
Of the amount, ASUU members got
N18.3billion, while non-teaching staff in the Senior Staff Association of
Nigerian University (SSANU), Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU) and the National
Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) got N4.6 billion.
The sharing formula, which was
condemned by the three non-academic staff unions, led to pockets of protests on
various campuses at the time, and eventually led to the unions embarking on a
long strike.
Apparently, to avoid the
controversy that greeted the sharing of the allowance in 2017, ASUU is
insisting that the Federal Government should categorically state the amount earmarked
for its members, which it said must not be less than N18.3 billion it received
then.
But in an exclusive interview
with PREMIUM TIMES Wednesday night, ASUU President, Mr Ogunyemi, said if the
government can mainstream the union’s demands especially on earned allowances
in the 2019 budget, the union will not need to come back for negotiation in
2020.
“Government promised to
mainstream academic allowance in 2017, starting from the 2018 budget but it was
not done. If the government is promising it again, what steps have they taken,
can we have evidence? Once beaten, twice shy.”
Mr Ogunyemi said the federal
government can spread the N220 billion for revitalisation of universities
across four quarters.
“In which case, the N50 billion
they will release now, if you add to what they released, N20 billion for last
year, we would have 150 billion left for the rest of the year and that has been
spread over the next three quarters.
“That’s what we’ve been saying
as our minimalist position,” he said.
On the shortfall in salaries,
he said: “Government promised to release the shortfall in salaries by January
18th, that’s two days away. Let’s wait and confirm that they’ve released it. We
told them to also address the case of two or three universities that were
omitted,” he said.
Mr Ogunyemi said the union has
submitted its suggestions and may be meeting with the government next week.
“But we’re waiting for their confirmation,” he said.
Source: PremiumTimesng.com
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